MP3 Moonlight Towers - Like You Were Never There
Price: 8.99 USD
Add to cart
Instant Download from music, digital version
Instant Download from music, digital version
|
Musicians use tradebit: Learn how to make music Pick up cool karaoke downloads Search for sheet music! |
File Data:
| Contact Seller: |
music,
|
| URL: |
|
| Embed: |
|
Description:
(ID 1462664)
in partnership with CDbaby
an album of golden ears, red eyes, and blue moods, spit and polish with a side of heartache, Britpop with a Southern twang.
12 MP3 Songs
POP: Power Pop, ROCK: Americana
Details:
Performing Songwriter
Record Review By Abby White
...Speaking of well crafted power-pop, don't not miss the amazing Moonlight Tower's album Like You Were Never There. I've had "Everybody Knows Why" on repeat all day. (Issue 89 Vol 13 November 2005)
...........................................................................
Pop Culture Press
Record Review By Andy Smith
Austin's finest power pop export circa 2005, Moonlight Towers' second record is a blazing, shimmering nugget with soaring melodies and vivid songs to spare. A bit of twang creeps in there, too, but as Like You Were Never There proves, singer James Stevens can write ingratiatingly devastating songs
...........................................................................
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Record Review By Ed Masley
Austin's Moonlight Towers bring a hearty Texas twang, a drummer who not only bashes but swings and some actual power to the old-school power-pop equation, suggesting a poppier V-Roys or maybe a twangier Superdrag. There's nothing especially revolutionary going on here, but the hooks are undeniable, from cuts as effervescent as the lead-off track, "Never the Same Again," to "Born To Die," a stately lighter-worthy ballad of the sort Tom Petty used to write.**** (four stars)
12 MP3 Songs
POP: Power Pop, ROCK: Americana
Details:
Performing Songwriter
Record Review By Abby White
...Speaking of well crafted power-pop, don't not miss the amazing Moonlight Tower's album Like You Were Never There. I've had "Everybody Knows Why" on repeat all day. (Issue 89 Vol 13 November 2005)
...........................................................................
Pop Culture Press
Record Review By Andy Smith
Austin's finest power pop export circa 2005, Moonlight Towers' second record is a blazing, shimmering nugget with soaring melodies and vivid songs to spare. A bit of twang creeps in there, too, but as Like You Were Never There proves, singer James Stevens can write ingratiatingly devastating songs
...........................................................................
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Record Review By Ed Masley
Austin's Moonlight Towers bring a hearty Texas twang, a drummer who not only bashes but swings and some actual power to the old-school power-pop equation, suggesting a poppier V-Roys or maybe a twangier Superdrag. There's nothing especially revolutionary going on here, but the hooks are undeniable, from cuts as effervescent as the lead-off track, "Never the Same Again," to "Born To Die," a stately lighter-worthy ballad of the sort Tom Petty used to write.**** (four stars)
in partnership with CDbaby


